- San Joaquin Antelope Squirrel
Taxobox
name = San Joaquin Antelope Squirrel
status = EN
trend = unknown
status_system = iucn2.3
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
ordo =Rodent ia
familia =Sciuridae
genus = "Ammospermophilus "
species = "A. nelsoni"
binomial = "Ammospermophilus nelsoni"
binomial_authority = (Merriam, 1893)The San Joaquin Antelope Squirrel or Nelson's Antelope Squirrel ("Ammospermophilus nelsoni") is found in the
San Joaquin Valley of theU.S. state ofCalifornia . It is endemic to the region, and is found in a much smaller range today than it originally inhabited. Since the San Joaquin Valley fell under heavy agricultural cultivation, habitat loss combined with rodenticide use has reduced the squirrel's numbers enough that it is now listed as athreatened species .The San Joaquin Antelope Squirrel is light tan or buffy in color with a white belly and a white streak down each side of its body in the fashion of other
antelope squirrel s. It is approximately 23 cm (9 in.) in length including its bushy, white-fringed tail. It is omnivorous, feeding mostly on green plants during the winter and insects and carrion when these are available. It occasionally caches food. The squirrels live in small underground familial colonies on sandy, easily excavated grasslands in isolated locations in San Luis Obispo and Kern Counties. Most of today's remaining San Joaquin Antelope Squirrels can be found in theCarrizo Plain , where their original habitat remains undisturbed.The binomial of this species commemorates the American naturalist
Edward William Nelson .References
* Database entry includes a brief justification of why this species is endangered and the criteria used
*Thorington, R. W. Jr. and R. S. Hoffman. 2005. Family Sciuridae. Pp. 754-818 "in" Mammal Species of the World a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. D. E. Wilson and D. M. Reeder eds. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
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